- Sep 10, 2005
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I'm trying to solve for inductance.
If I have two parallel plates with two different materials such that each plate sandwiches half of both materials, how do the materials affect the current distribution? I know the B field normal to the interface is supposed to be the same, but Ampere's law seems to tell me the H fields normal to the interface are the same as well (unless the current distributions are non-uniform).
Or, see #3 http://cobweb.ecn.purdue.edu/~djiao/ee311/handout/EE311%20Homework 10.pdf
I'm guessing if I solve for H in freespace using Ampere's Law, I could get to a solution, but I don't even understand what's happening.
I know the H field between the plates is equal to the current density divided by the width. But if the current density is uniform along the plates, H would be the same along the interface, which is incorrect. The only thing that would make them different would be having a different current density. An explanation of what physically is happening would help.
If I have two parallel plates with two different materials such that each plate sandwiches half of both materials, how do the materials affect the current distribution? I know the B field normal to the interface is supposed to be the same, but Ampere's law seems to tell me the H fields normal to the interface are the same as well (unless the current distributions are non-uniform).
Or, see #3 http://cobweb.ecn.purdue.edu/~djiao/ee311/handout/EE311%20Homework 10.pdf
I'm guessing if I solve for H in freespace using Ampere's Law, I could get to a solution, but I don't even understand what's happening.
I know the H field between the plates is equal to the current density divided by the width. But if the current density is uniform along the plates, H would be the same along the interface, which is incorrect. The only thing that would make them different would be having a different current density. An explanation of what physically is happening would help.
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